Handling Complaints
Complaints happen. A drink might come out wrong, a wait might be too long, or someone might just be having a bad day. How you handle it determines whether that person comes back or tells their friends to avoid us. The good news is that most complaints are easy to fix if you stay calm and act quickly.
The Golden Rule
Listen first, fix second.
Do not interrupt. Do not get defensive. Let the customer finish telling you what is wrong, then respond. Most people just want to feel heard before they want a solution.
Step-by-Step: Handling Any Complaint
| Step | What to Do | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Listen | Let them explain the issue completely. Make eye contact. Nod. | -- |
| 2. Acknowledge | Show that you understand and that you take it seriously. | "I completely understand. That's not the experience we want you to have." |
| 3. Apologize | A sincere, simple apology. Do not over-explain or make excuses. | "I'm sorry about that." |
| 4. Fix it | Offer a solution immediately. | "Let me remake that for you right now." |
| 5. Follow up | After the fix, check back to make sure they are satisfied. | "How's the new one? Is that closer to what you were looking for?" |
Apologize Even If It Is Not Your Fault
You are representing Muse & Co, not yourself personally. Saying "I'm sorry about that" is not admitting blame -- it is showing empathy. Customers do not care whose fault it is. They care that you care.
Common Complaints and How to Handle Them
Wrong Drink
What happened: They got a different drink than what they ordered.
What to do:
- Apologize -- "I'm sorry, that's on us."
- Remake the correct drink immediately.
- Let them keep the wrong one if they want it.
Too Sweet or Not Sweet Enough
What happened: The sweetness level is not to their liking.
What to do:
- Offer to remake it at a different sweetness level.
- If they just want a small adjustment, see if you can modify the existing drink (adding unsweetened tea to dilute, for example).
- Make a note of their preference for next time if they are a regular.
Long Wait Time
What happened: Their order is taking longer than expected.
What to do:
- Acknowledge the wait -- "I know it's been a bit of a wait, I'm sorry about that."
- Give them a time estimate -- "Your drink should be up in about two minutes."
- If the wait was genuinely long (more than 10 minutes for a single drink), consider offering a small extra like a free topping on their next visit.
Drink Quality Issue
What happened: Something is off about the drink -- wrong temperature, wrong texture, tastes unusual.
What to do:
- Ask what specifically is wrong so you can fix it.
- Remake the drink. Do not try to "fix" a bad drink by adding to it -- start fresh.
- If you notice a pattern (multiple complaints about the same drink), flag it for your shift lead. There may be an ingredient or equipment issue.
Resolution Options
You have two main tools for resolving complaints:
| Option | When to Use | How |
|---|---|---|
| Remake the drink | Always offer this first. Works for wrong drinks, taste issues, quality problems. | Make a fresh drink from scratch with the correct specifications. |
| Refund | If the customer does not want a remake, or if the issue cannot be fixed with a new drink. | Process through the POS -- find the order and tap Refund. See How to Use the POS for refund steps. |
Remake First, Refund Second
Always offer to remake the drink before offering a refund. Most people would rather have the drink they wanted than get their money back. A refund means they leave empty-handed and possibly unsatisfied. A remake gives you a chance to get it right.
Difficult Situations
The Frustrated Customer
Sometimes a customer is visibly upset -- raised voice, sharp tone, visible frustration. This is not personal. Stay calm and follow the same steps: listen, acknowledge, apologize, fix.
Do:
- Keep your voice calm and steady.
- Use phrases like "I understand" and "Let me fix this for you."
- Give them space to vent without interrupting.
Do not:
- Match their energy or raise your voice.
- Say "calm down" -- this never helps.
- Take it personally.
The Aggressive Customer
If a customer becomes verbally abusive, threatening, or makes you feel unsafe:
- Stay calm. Do not engage or argue back.
- Set a boundary. "I want to help you, but I need us to keep this respectful."
- Get your shift lead or manager. You do not have to handle this alone. Step back and let someone with more authority take over.
- If there is no manager on site, calmly let the customer know you will have management follow up with them via email at hello@ncmuse.co.
Your Safety Comes First
No drink, refund, or complaint is worth your safety or wellbeing. If a situation escalates beyond what you are comfortable handling, step away and get help. You will never be penalized for removing yourself from an uncomfortable situation.
Documenting Complaints
After resolving a complaint, document it so the team can track patterns and improve:
- Minor issues (wrong drink, sweetness preference): No formal documentation needed, but mention it to your shift lead.
- Significant complaints (quality issues, long recurring waits, customer visibly upset): Send a brief note to hello@ncmuse.co with what happened, how it was resolved, and any follow-up needed.
- Serious incidents (aggressive behavior, safety concerns, threats): Document immediately via email to hello@ncmuse.co with as much detail as possible -- what happened, when, who was involved, and how it was handled.
Prevention
The best complaint is the one that never happens. Here are ways to reduce issues before they start:
| Prevention | How |
|---|---|
| Confirm orders before making them | Read back the order at checkout |
| Double-check customizations | Verify sweetness and ice level on the label before prepping |
| Communicate wait times | If it is going to be more than 5 minutes, let them know up front |
| Keep drink quality consistent | Follow recipes exactly. See Drink Categories |
| Stay attentive | Check in with customers after they receive their drink |
Last updated: March 2026
